Brewer v. . Ring and Valk

99 S.E. 358, 177 N.C. 477, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 152
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 21, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 99 S.E. 358 (Brewer v. . Ring and Valk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brewer v. . Ring and Valk, 99 S.E. 358, 177 N.C. 477, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 152 (N.C. 1919).

Opinion

Plaintiffs sought to recover damages for malpractice of defendants, physicians and surgeons, in wrongly and negligently diagnosing the feme plaintiff's pregnancy as a case of fibroid tumor of the uterus or an ovarian tumor. There was much evidence taken at the trial upon the questions of negligence and damages as to each of the two defendants, and the jury returned the following verdict: *Page 504

"Were the plaintiffs injured by the negligence or want of skill of the defendants, or either of them? Answer: `No.'"

There were two other issues as to the damages each of the plaintiffs was entitled to recover, but as the verdict upon the first issue was adverse to them they were, of course, not answered, as it was not necessary that they should be. It is alleged in the complaint that the doctors, after their examination had been made — each acting separately in making it, and consulting thereafter together in regard to it — reported that thefeme plaintiff was suffering from an ovarian tumor of rapid and malignant growth, and that an immediate operation was necessary, and that when the incision in the abdomen was made so that the ocular proof of her condition was afforded and her real trouble was disclosed it was found that there was no tumor, but that instead she was between four and five months advanced in pregnancy. That for the purpose of the operation she was taken, under the advice of Dr. Ring, to the Twin City Hospital at Winston-Salem, where Dr. A. de T. Valk resided, and where, in the hospital, he first made his examination of her and pronounced her ailment that of an ovarian tumor of rapid growth, calling for an immediate operation.

It is further alleged that when they were informed by the physicians and surgeons as to the cause of the feme plaintiff's then physical condition, both plaintiffs urged that she go to the hospital at Baltimore for further diagnosis and treatment, when Dr. Ring protested against such a course, and insisted that, in view of the seriousness of her trouble, she be carried at once to Winston-Salem, as delay would be dangerous, if not fatal; he further asserting that Dr. Valk was the most (479) skillful surgeons in the State, and all would be well. That, after both examinations had been completed, the defendants declared that their knowledge of her case was sufficient; their diagnosis was positively correct; that they knew what they were doing; that no further diagnosis was necessary or required; that they knew for a certainty that an ovarian tumor existed and that it required an immediate operation to prevent death. That upon this representation, and trusting to the skill and ability of her physicians and surgeons, the plaintiffs yielded to their advice, the feme plaintiff submitting to the operation with her husband's consent, and the same was performed with the result above stated. That morphine was injected into her arm and anesthetics administered until she was sufficiently under their influence, when the incision, eight or ten inches in length, was made in the abdomen, which exposed the internal organs and showed the diagnosis to be false, as thefeme plaintiff was only normally pregnant, and there was no indication of tumor. The surgeon's wound was closed, the patient recovered of it, and in due course was delivered of her child without any untoward *Page 505 incident in the accouchement. She afterwards, within the usual period, was restored to her normal health.

It is further alleged "That the defendants negligently performed the operation without possessing or exercising the knowledge and skill possessed by the ordinary physician in surgery, and without possessing and exercising this knowledge did negligently and carelessly undertake to diagnose and determine the condition of the feme plaintiff; and did, without possessing and exercising the skill and knowledge possessed and exercised by the ordinary physician and surgeon, carelessly, negligently, and erroneously diagnose and determine that the said feme plaintiff was suffering from an ovarian tumor of rapid growth, when in fact she was not so suffering, and that the defendants knew or should have known it by the exercise of the ordinary knowledge and skill possessed by the average physician and surgeon," thereby requiring long confinement of feme plaintiff to her bed and causing her great bodily pain, and also mental anguish in many ways, which are particularly set forth, and the loss of services and other benefits, to her damage ten thousand dollars.

The defendants distinctly and circumstantially denied, except in one respect, each and every allegation of negligence or malpractice, and the existence of any fact tending to show it, or to prove that they acted otherwise than the most careful and skillful physicians or surgeon would have done under like circumstances, and also denied all right to damages, and this denial made up the issues submitted to the jury.

The complaint was amended so as to allege that the incision was too long, and that this error in operation caused hernia, which it appears developed some time after child-birth. This also was (480) denied.

We will now state, in substance, the contentions of the parties, with such allusions to the testimony as may be thought proper to give a clear apprehension of the case from the two different standpoints:

The plaintiffs contended that, upon the evidence, it appeared that thefeme plaintiff was not suffering from tumor of any kind, but was in a normal condition, with the exception of the unusual menstrual flow during her state of pregnancy, and the fact that she experienced no symptoms, such as nausea, and so forth, indicating that she was pregnant. That the surgeons had made an exceedingly superficial diagnosis, and one not calculated to disclose, with any reliable degree of certainty, her real condition, and that in not making a closer and more minute examination of her body, as a careful physician of ordinary knowledge and capacity would and should have done, they were misled by their own fault in this respect, and thereby caused the feme plaintiff great and unnecessary suffering of mind and body, and her husband *Page 506 great mental anguish and the loss of her society and services, and subjected him to great expense laid out in her cure and restoration to health. They assert that defendants should have been more skillful and careful in their diagnosis and treatment of their patient, especially in view of the urgent appeal made to them by plaintiffs that she be taken to Baltimore for further observation and study of her case, which they predict would have resulted in a different diagnosis and the ascertainment of her real condition, and would have saved her from the serious operation she underwent and its attendant suffering and anxiety, and left her in a normal state of health and strength to withstand and overcome the perils of pregnancy and child-birth. They also complain of the herein which followed the useless operation to which she was subjected.

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Bluebook (online)
99 S.E. 358, 177 N.C. 477, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brewer-v-ring-and-valk-nc-1919.